The new round would value SoFi around $4.3 billion, the same valuation of its 2017 financing round led by Silver Lake, according to Bloomberg.

Investors have sought protective clauses in the terms of the deal which would safeguard them them in case the company raises money or gets acquired below that price down the road, according to the report.

Though the round is large by venture capital standards, it’s just half the size of SoftBank’s $1 billion investment in SoFi back in 2015, which valued the company at $2.6 billion. The company also raised money from G Squared in December 2018, according to PitchBook.

SoFi, which offers personal loans, student loans as well as other tools like checking and stock trading, is run by Anthony Noto, the former chief operating officer of Twitter and former managing director at Goldman Sachs.

Noto took on the role in 2018 after SoFi’s founding CEO Mike Cagney stepped down amid a sexual harassment scandal at the company, kicked off by a New York Times investigation which characterized the company as “a frat house.”